Every detail of the incoming President's move to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave is 'planned to the minute' – from new mattresses to fresh bathroom towels
As millions watched President Donald Trump’s inauguration at the White House on Monday, Jan. 20, many noticed that he did not place his left hand on a Bible while being sworn in. Now people are questioning that gesture, and wondering if the president can be sworn in without using a Bible.
Here’s a short list of presidents who lived elsewhere during their time in office and when the president could move into the White House.
President Donald Trump redecorated the Oval Office with many of the same artifacts from his first White House term.
Some presidents did not use a Bible to take the oath of office, including Theodore Roosevelt, who did not use anything when he was sworn into office in 1901, and John Quincy Adams, who chose a legal book for his 1825 swearing-in, to signify his responsibility to uphold the U.S. constitutional law.
Every US president except for George Washington has stayed at the White House. Ironically, it was he who was deeply involved in the construction, which started in 1792. As Donald Trump returns, we loo
Former President Donald Trump will become the 45th and 47th President of the United States at noon on Monday, after an unprecedented political comeback that propelled him through the 2024 election
Donald Trump will be sworn into office on Monday, which is also Martin Luther King Jr. Day. See the schedule of events.
Joe Biden's presidency and half a century of public service come to an end as Donald Trump begins second term.
You can watch all Inauguration Day events Monday on our livestream here, find a planned lineup of events, review President-elect Donald Trump's sweeping promises and learn what's changed since he was sworn into office eight years ago.
Just outside the White House, one historic home sits in Northwest, D.C.- The Blair House. The home is the U.S. president’s guest house. It has played an
After the pardons were announced, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky — both Republicans — posted to X claiming that issuing pardons to Fauci, Milley and others implied they were guilty of a crime, as did other right-leaning accounts on the platform.